What Steve Jobs Learned in the Wilderness — THE saga of Steven P. Jobs is so well known that it has entered the nation's mythology: he's the prodigal who returned to Apple in 1997, righted a listing ship and built it into one of the most valuable companies in the world.

The OS Doesn't Matter... Once upon a time, operating systems used to matter a lot; they defined what a computer could and couldn't do. The “old” OS orchestrated the use of resources: memory, processors, I/O (input/output) to external devices (screen, keyboard, disks, network, printers...).

New Twitter.com has rate limits too — Remember when we told you that the new Twitter.com was re-engineered to use its own APIs? Well, apparently Twitter also decided to set a rate-limit for usage on Twitter.com as well. That's right, I just got shut down for using Twitter.com too much within an hour.

Wheretheladies.at Shows You Where The Ladies Are At — At the Tahoe Tech Talk this weekend, someone from the audience introduced themselves as a representative of Wheretheladies.at, a domain whose extreme ridiculousness piqued my interest a) because it is actually real and b) …

What Can Search Predict? — This week research scientists at Yahoo! Labs published a paper in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that examines the possibility of using web search data to predict consumer behavior. Their results have captured the public imagination …

Shocking: Apple Approves BitTorrent App For App Store — Apple is known for the stringent guidelines it applies when deciding which software to allow into their App Store - BitTorrent is one of the things on their ban list. However, one developer who carefully avoided the dirty word …

Google's CEO: ‘The Laws Are Written by Lobbyists’ — Watch the full video of this session — “The average American doesn't realize how much of the laws are written by lobbyists” to protect incumbent interests, Google CEO Eric Schmidt told Atlantic editor James Bennet at the Washington Ideas Forum.

Rise of the Online Autocrats — It turns out that the enemies of free expression are adept at the Internet, too. — The tweets started arriving in August, and they did not mince words. One of the first accused the South Korean government of being “a prostitute of the United States.”